Posts Tagged 'reference is dead'

Lunch with Lauren: Reference and the Research Process

Whenever Lauren and I have lunch we end up with wonderful and grand schemes for rethinking the library. I always leave with 100 ideas and many things to do. Our first task was to blog about the discussion and see where we overlap in thinking. And the first grand idea up is reference and the research process.

We’ve been talking about this idea since ALA NOLA and it stems from both concerns Lauren has about reference and from my experience with embedded librarianship. I’ve been obsessed with the idea of embedded librarianship for a year or so now because I see it as the future of reference.

Now to clarify, embedded librarianship does not mean just becoming a member of online courses. I see embedded librarianship as deep integration into a class or a discipline or any institution separate from the library. It could be online, but being in a class online doesn’t equal embedded librarianship. It is the activity that you do and the role that you develop that constitutes embeddedness.

Embeddedness implies a deeper level of understanding of the content of the institution in which we are embedded. Yes, we will be the librarian, but the librarian also needs to have a deeper knowledge of what actually goes on within that institution and potentially some subject expertise.

Now there is a huge debate about whether you need training in an area to support a department, and if we are supporting groups in the traditional liaison model, then I don’t think you need subject expertise. As Lauren says you can learn to be good at answering any question. My friend and colleague Jenny Dale is the perfect example. She support English (her background) and Kinesiology (decidedly not her background) and she is fab at both. Steve Cramer is also an amazing business librarian with a Medievalist’s background. But, he has become masterful in his area by teaching himself the content to some degree.

Subject expertise (or willingness to study the area) helps quite a bit, especially if we are trying to integrate our work more into the actual research process of our students and faculty. Here’s why I think this. I support Political Science, which is my background. Many of the questions I get are simple database searches, but a growing number of those database questions have been interspersed with questions like this:

  • “What does decentralization mean?”
  • “What is the Responsibility to Protect?”
  • “Do my variables sound remotely on target?”
  • “What are operational definitions?” (which spawned a post on the death of reference)

Now, anyone at the reference desk could eventually answer those questions using subject dictionaries, but honestly most of the time those reference resources give incredibly vague definitions or definitions that refer to components of an idea and not the idea as it is used in their specific class. You could refer them back to their professors, but typically students ask these questions in the moment of actual need (or avoid their professors for various reasons).

For deep embedded librarianship subject expertise, and some kind of passion for the field, is critical. How does this relate to rethinking reference? Well, while I think embedded librarianship is the future, it would be unrealistic to expect everyone to have this level of expertise in our cash-strapped libraries. And of course working the desk is entirely different. But what if our training for the desk revolved more around thinking in terms of disciplinary areas and less in terms of tools?

At UNCG we have classes in Social Science or Humanities information sources, but those tend to be focused on the tools and databases of those disciplines. They are less focused on the commonalities of research within those larger areas. What I want to know is how research is actually done within the field? What are the key things that matter? What is the research lifecycle? And most importantly, when does the library figure in?

For our reference intern training starting last fall the intern coordinators (myself, Amy Harris, and Jenny Dale) instituted this approach in our first training sessions. We taught three sessions that were non-department or tools specific: science research, humanities research, and social science research. I only have the slides for social science, but you can get a picture of what we were trying to do. I should mention this is a work in progress, so suggestions are welcome!

Some of the session considers tools, but the tools are contextualized within the research process. Our goal is to give these students the basic vocabulary of these larger areas so that they can better see how a field works. For example, what is secondary data analysis and why does that matter to the social sciences? This would then encourage a student to think beyond the typical article databases when some numeric information might be more appropriate for a question. I think approaching training this way would help with Lauren’s issue of supporting interdisciplinary departments where you have researchers working in both the social sciences and the humanities.

To wrap this up, I see two big areas for future investment in reference. One is using those people who are subject experts and who feel comfortable in a field more strategically in embedded relationships. Two is revamping our training at the reference desk to encompass more thinking about the discipline’s approach and less about the tools. Both ideas are more about the process of research than the specific question being asked, but in our environment of declining reference questions shouldn’t we be more concerned about getting into that process?

Up next, what is the library of the future?

this post is about food…and libraries…but mostly food

I just made these cookies. Cowboy cookies courtesy of Isa Chandra Moskowitz. And the are vegan. And you bet your bottom they are good.

Vegan Cowboy Cookies

Don’t know if they are as good as the ones I made on Tuesday for a vegan friend’s birthday, but they are up there. I’ve been baking a lot lately. I love to bake for one. I especially like baking vegan goodies because people always seem so skeptical and then are always, always so amazed at how good they taste. The reality is baking is just chemistry with edible components. If you have the right ingredients to create certain chemical reactions, then you will end up with a cookie every time. That’s why the food industry can make good-tasting creations without using real food. In vegan baking (or cooking) you start with (usually) real food and then have an added bonus of cruelty-free. I’m not vegan and I have fallen from my vegetarian pedestal many times, but honestly vegan baking is just a win-win.

I also tend to bake when I’m stressed about something and this is where the library comes in. UNCG’s Chancellor announced a 15% budget cut yesterday. Terrible news for the library, the university, and for NC’s educational system. I’m not denying we could trim some fat, but we have been trimming like crazy since I became a librarian. We are also living through a few big changes in our library; some I think will be positive and others could have long term costs. We will work through the future, but no one can deny that change is stressful.

The thing I worry about for libraries, especially academic libraries, is that we tend to respond to our perceived failings and so rarely celebrate our actual successes. The reality of declining questions at the reference desk is a fact at UNCG.  But focusing on the way things used to be ignores the soaring numbers of consultations, emails, and chats that our reference librarians are receiving. And no one seems to be examine why that is happening. Why, if reference is dead, do we still see a large number of people coming to ask for our assistance on their research? What is it we are doing right?

Maybe my library happens to be staffed by outrageously smart, personable and outgoing people who just bring in the crowds. I mean it is really, but something else is going on here. We’ve had instruction class numbers through the roof. The business librarian gets a crazy number of contacts from faculty and students (around 500 a year I think). And last year I hit my high of over 250. What are we doing right? What are the ingredients that make us still be part of the research process?

These are ongoing questions for me and I haven’t figured them out obviously. Maybe someday I should do a study. If you have ideas, leave them here. I’d love to hear them.

In the meantime, back to some vegan baking.

reference is dead! long live reference!: a (very) personal rant

I admit that the Geeks are the Future article in Library Journal got me a bit fired up. I admit that I know getting fired up is the purpose of such presentations. I also admit that I have heard the same comment repeated by so-called knowledge makers, so it is hardly revolutionary. But this refrain hit home today because it helped to clarify my own thinking about the subject. Is reference dead? Well, in many ways it depends on your definitions.

An underlying assumption of The “Reference is Dead” view is that reference librarians are sitting patiently at a desk waiting for people to come and ask random questions about the seven dwarfs or ten reindeer or whatever other useless figure was mentioned in the movie Desk Set. Or even, what is the population of Mexico? I mean, really. I even google the population of Mexico instead of going to the library’s website. That is not reference. Maybe it was ten years ago, but it isn’t anymore.

Let’s try this. How about reference involves teaching both one shot and for-credit classes (sometimes even content classes! shocker!), creating online materials, sitting in curriculum committee meetings, consulting with students in your office, virtually, and in the coffee shop, and doing a hundred other things? Real reference involves answering questions like, “Can you help me figure out what this professor means by operational definitions?” Some librarians might say “No, that is not my job,” but considering I know the answer to this question it would be rude not to help a student think through her problem (without giving her the answer). Can a database or a tutorial do that? It can give her definitions, but she had definitions. What she needed was context and that was what I, a reference librarian, could give her.  What she needed was a teacher not an automaton.

Second, whether or not Neiburger intends it, these blanket proclamations are sometimes used to make statements about necessary changes at all types of libraries. I do not pretend to understand what goes on in a public library and I do not know what kinds of questions patrons are asking in a public library. My library, however, is not a public library. Our library is used heavily by many different types of patrons (including community members who dislike the public library for whatever reason). In an era of budget cuts, I find it troubling that a librarian would proclaim the end of reference and not even be bothered to qualify that statement in a meaningful manner. Thank you, Eli Neiburger, for giving potential fuel to a General Assembly bent on gutting education. If they decide to go after our academic libraries specifically, I’ll know where to place the blame.

Furthermore, who are these “patrons” to whom he refers? In the academic library, we aim to be mindful about the differences in our patrons — undergraduates in political science, graduates in nursing, faculty in business administration. There is no one patron. There are many types of patrons who all use the library in different ways. The question we need to be asking is why do they use the library so differently? What insights to they bring to the research process from the beginning? What kind of personal assistance do they need? What expectations do they have about the library, its resources, and its services?

If you don’t address those questions, how can you even begin to make decisions about where your IT resources should go? And even when you know the answers to these questions, you need public services people who will market what the geeks have created. Some geeks are fabulous marketers. But I don’t expect they will have the time, in addition to managing servers and building tools, to go out and make the connections necessary to get those tools used. “If you build it they will come” is not a mantra for any institution’s survival.

Which brings me to a dilemma. Since becoming a librarian I have been subjected to two ideas over and over again. 1) Patrons want to be able to “google” it, and 2) Millennials want their professors (and everyone else) to know their names and what makes them super special. So, here’s my dilemma. In creating online tools, how do we create an experience that is truly personal? Yes, Flickr may say “Bok Lynda” when I log in, but I (most of the time) realize that it isn’t a person interacting with me (and I only rarely say “Bok” back). Will a database or an online tutorial know the needs of my students in the residential college as well as I can? Maybe someday, but not now. And in putting all of our resources to create truly personal library tools are we really saving money? I can assure you (and our wonderful General Assembly) that I cost a whole lot less than an IT admin and server space. Even if you don’t see my logic, you have to admit the tension exists. Our youngest users (according to the illustrious literature) want educators to know their names and who they are. And, yes Virginia, I am an educator.

When it comes down to it, I like people. I like working with, interacting with, and learning with people. I expect the library to be about people too. Surveys, usability tests, and other standardized techniques are critical for understanding users. Ultimately, however, they aren’t going to do us any good if we aren’t engaging in a more fundamental act of data gathering — interaction. And that word alone, if anything, is what reference is all about.


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